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Zachary Elwood's avatar

Thanks for the opportunity to write a piece for the LP. Often in writing about polarization and people's perceptions, I hear the criticism "but that view isn't true." I want to emphasize that conflict/polarization dynamics are largely about perceptions, not about who's right or wrong. Some of the views about what's undemocratic I talk about in this piece I myself disagree with. It's important to recognize that perceptions matter, no matter who's stances are more right or wrong, and it's important to see that perceptions naturally grow darker and more pessimistic in a toxically polarized environment like ours. And anyone who cares about persuasion and getting things done must be willing to grapple with perceptions.

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Brent Nyitray's avatar

The left uses the courts and the administrative state (which are largely non-elected entities) to implement items that would never have a prayer of being passed in Congress. Pretty undemocratic.

The Russian Collusion Hoax, where Obama used a fabricated story as a pretext for a FISA warrant to spy on the Trump campaign, is 1000x worse than what Nixon did, and pretty un-democratic.

The use of lawfare in the 2024 campaign - the appraisal dispute, the campaign finance kerfuffle, tactics to keep Trump off the ballot - are highly undemocratic.

Finally, the left's use of obscure judges to frustrate Trump's agenda - as if implementing an executive order is a-ok, while reversing it is not - is highly undemocratic. Like it or not, many of the policies Trump is implementing were supported by the electorate.

Republicans believe that "democracy" means nothing more than "democrats getting their way." So yeah, they are cynical. With good reason.

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